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Trial Title:
Exploiting the Gut Microbiota and Its Metabolites in Pelvic Cancer
NCT ID:
NCT05605353
Condition:
Pelvic Neoplasm
Conditions: Official terms:
Pelvic Neoplasms
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Prospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Diagnostic Test
Intervention name:
Faecal microbiota sampling and blood sampling
Description:
There is no intervention in this study. We will obtain faeces and blood from the
recruited patients and assess the microbiota and their metabolites therein. This is an
observational work
Arm group label:
Colorectal
Arm group label:
Gynaecological
Arm group label:
Urological
Summary:
The large intestine is the last part of the digestive tract. It absorbs water and dietary
substances. However, it is also where most of our bacteria are resident. These bacteria
are important for our health and influence many different diseases, including Colon
Cancer, Ulcerative Colitis and Crohn's disease. The gut bacteria can also potentially
influence responses to treatments in other cancers by helping to change the responses to
radiotherapy and chemotherapy. The interactions between these bacteria and the rest of
our cells are only now becoming understood and there is little research on the
interactions between these bacteria and cancer radiotherapy treatments in pelvic cancer.
We will therefore explore this in more detail. We will ask for samples of the patient's
poo before their treatment for pelvic cancers. This will include patients with bladder,
prostate, cervical, ovarian, womb or colorectal cancers. By doing so we will be able to
compare the profile of gut bacteria with responses to treatments, thereby increasing our
understanding of the colonic bacteria.
To do this we process the poo specimens to remove the bacterial genetic material (DNA) of
the bacteria and process it on a machine to read the genetic code and also study the
metabolites that they will produce. We can then make a direct comparison between
different samples of the relative numbers of different bacteria present. In some cases,
we will compare this to metabolites and inflammatory and immune markers identified in a
blood sample. This work might help future patients by determining what are the best
bacteria to have in the colon during cancer treatments. These could potentially be given
to patients, before their cancer treatment, in the form of probiotic medications, should
there be an improvement demonstrated in our research. Alternatively we could alter the
patients' intakes of specific dietary fibres to boost these bacteria specifically.
Detailed description:
The University of Aberdeen and Aberdeen Royal Infirmary (ARI) in NHS Grampian are in the
unique position of having a single site campus for microbiota-related laboratory science
at the world-famous Rowett Institute, Biorepository facilities on campus for rapid sample
processing and NHS facilities for treatment of multiple pelvic tumour types, including
colorectal, gynaecological and urological.
Patients will be approached in their respective pelvic cancer clinics, after
identification for potential inclusion at the respective multi-disciplinary team (MDT)
meeting. The patient will be informed of their diagnosis and management plan by a
clinician responsible for their care (may include Clinical Nurse Specialist). Patients
will only be approached about the research at a subsequent meeting, e.g. when the
specialist nurses contact the patient to address any further questions around the
management plan discussed, they attend the consultant clinic for consent to definitive
treatment, etc. This gives the patient sufficient time to process their diagnosis and
management plan before introducing the research. At this meeting patients will be
provided with the PIS (this will be posted to the patient if the meeting is via video
teleconference). If they are willing to consider being involved, they will then be
contacted by a research nurse or other suitably qualified team member, who will discuss
the study further and answer any questions. If they are willing to take part arrangements
will be made for a member of the clinical team to obtain written informed consent when
the patient attends hospital for a subsequent clinical appointment.
They will be asked to donate a faecal sample (and in a subset of colorectal patients, a
right-sided colonic contents sample taken at the time of their operation) for processing
at the Rowett Institute Human Nutrition Unit before the start of their next cancer
therapy (chemotherapy, radiotherapy or surgery). Consent will also be sought to obtain a
blood sample. This will normally be obtained during routine venesection for clinical
reasons and will be blood surplus to clinical requirements processed by the
Biorepository. Where necessary, if blood is not being collected as part of standard
clinical care, an extra venepuncture, of 5mls, will be requested. Blood will be processed
for plasma extraction.
Patients will also be encouraged to complete an optional food frequency questionnaire
(FFQ) indicating what they have eaten and drank in the three months before taking their
stool samples. However, if they feel unable to complete this, their decision will be
respected and they can continue in the study. These questionnaires take around 30 minutes
to complete and will be provided to the patients either during a clinical appointment
before their first cancer therapy or posted out to them. A subgroup of patients will also
be asked if they would be willing to provide a more in-depth assessment of their diet on
the four days before providing the stool sample but it will be highlighted to them that
this is optional and they are free to refuse.
Faecal samples will be collected from the ARI brought to the hospital on the day of a
clinic appointment or initial treatment for the patient. Alternatively, the participant
can leave the sample at a specific drop off centre in the Rowett institute. This will be
left to the discretion of the participant as to whichever is most convenient for them.
Completed food diaries/questionnaires will also be collected at the same time and in the
same location as the faecal sample drop-off.
No other additional samples are required from the patient. After obtaining the specimens,
at the Rowett Institute, a portion will be processed by Dispomix for DNA extraction using
Powersoil DNA extraction kits and stored in freezers before analysis by 16S rRNA gene
sequencing. Another portion will be processed and stored for SCFA analysis by gas
chromatography and some of the remaining faeces stored for future analyses.
Plasma will be extracted from the blood samples from the NHS Haematology laboratories and
transferred to the Rowett Institute by the research team involved in the study. In
situations where a blood sample has not been taken for clinical purposes the blood sample
will be collected by a phlebotomist or other trained staff at the Human Nutrition unit of
the Rowett Institute. Once the plasma has been extracted, the blood samples will be
stored in freezers at the Rowett Institute.
16S rRNA gene sequencing of faecal DNA will be undertaken at the Centre for Genome
Enabled Biology and Medicine (CCEBM), University of Aberdeen, including bioinformatics
analysis. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, a small portion of the bacterial genetic
material is examined, which differs between different bacteria, allowing us to estimate
the 'relative abundance' of each within each specimen. We will also analyse SCFAs in
faeces by GC and plasma by GC-MS (this more sensitive technique is required for plasma
due to lower concentrations of metabolites present) at the Rowett Institute Analytical
facility. At the end of this study, if sufficient sample remains in a usable condition we
would like to store this for future research. After necessary funding and approvals are
obtained we may in future investigate bacterial DNA in more detail (to species/strain
level) by metagenomics and other metabolites, e.g. tryptophan, bile acids, and
inflammatory (e.g. calprotectin) and immune markers (e.g. cytokines).
Clinical data will be pseudo-anonymised at source and collected by the research team
(including biobank staff for baseline data and, research nurses, clinical fellows,
radiographers, etc, for follow up data). This will be included in the subsequent
analysis. Tumour responses and the side effects of radiotherapy/ chemoradiotherapy or
surgery will be obtained from patient notes to look at toxicity and outcomes, and some
patients will have been asked to fill in questionnaires as part of their routine clinical
follow-up, such as the RTOG and EPIC26 (questionnaires routinely used in clinical
practice).
16S rRNA gene sequencing data will be analysed by Bioinformaticians at the University of
Aberdeen specialised in handling these large data sets, to determine the richness and
relative abundance of bacteria present. Data will be stored by IT services on the High
Performance Computer Cluster and submitted to a public repository. Associations will be
studied between 16S rRNA gene sequencing data, SCFA analysis and available clinical data.
Statistical analysis will be undertaken by Statisticians from Biomathematics and
Statistics Scotland
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
450 patients who have been diagnosed with pelvic neoplasms in the NHS Grampian region of
Scotland, United Kingdom
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Patients willing to consent
2. Any patient who is being treated in NHS Grampian for a pelvic cancer (Colorectal,
urological or gynaecological) above 16 years of age
Exclusion Criteria:
1. patients who are not willing to consent to be involved
2. Malignancies from other sources or anatomical locations
3. Patients who lack the understanding of the study to obtain appropriate levels of
consen
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
16 Years
Maximum age:
99 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Aberdeen Royal Infirmary
Address:
City:
Aberdeen
Zip:
AB25 2ZN
Country:
United Kingdom
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
George Ramsay, Phd FRCS
Phone:
07846663356
Email:
george.ramsay@abdn.ac.uk
Start date:
March 1, 2023
Completion date:
May 31, 2029
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University of Aberdeen
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University of Aberdeen
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05605353